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  • 12
    Feb
    2013
    11:00pm, EST

    Opera performance lights up bamboo theater

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    A man walks by the Bamboo Theater, a 800-seat temporary theater made of bamboo to house a special series of Cantonese opera shows, in Hong Kong on Feb. 12, 2013.  Cantonese opera -- where actors wear elaborate costumes and make-up, and must be adept at elaborately choreographed martial arts as well as singing -- was recognized as "intangible cultural heritage" by UN cultural agency UNESCO in 2009.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    An actress looks on in the backstage of the Bamboo Theater.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    An actor performs at the Bamboo Theater.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Actors perform at the Bamboo Theater.

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  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    3:43pm, EST

    Family theater struggles to avoid final curtain call in Spain

    Jasper Juinen / Getty Images

    Actress Maria Pastor gets her hair done backstage by her mother Teresa Valentin before 'Tres Anos,' a show set in the 1930's between the two World Wars, at the Teatro Guindalera family theater on Nov. 3 in Madrid, Spain.

    Jasper Juinen / Getty Images

    Actress Maria Pastor rehearses on stage before getting dressed for 'Tres Anos,' a show set in the 1930's between the two World Wars, at the Teatro Guindalera family theater on Nov. 3 in Madrid, Spain.

    Getty Images reports -- Teresa Valentin and her husband Juan Pastor run the small Guindalera theater in Madrid, Spain. Their daughter Maria is the theater's main actress. Before the Spanish crisis, the theater received subsidies through the Caja Madrid cultural program, now part of the Bankia group bailed out by the Spanish government. For two years, the theater has had to survive on its own, without any bank or government subsidies, and the recent nearly three-fold tax hike on theater-ticket sales is not making it easier to survive. With theaters around them closing down, the Teatro Guindalera is surviving for the moment because it is family-run. Juan Pastor, who is also the director, producer and script writer, says he is in doubts whether the theater will still be around next year. Still, he says, "As a poet cannot stop writing poetry, an actor can not stop acting." If he has to stop, Pastor says he would start a theater at home.

    Jasper Juinen / Getty Images

    Teresa Valentin checks the tickets from people arriving for 'Tres Anos' on Nov. 3 in Madrid, Spain.

    Jasper Juinen / Getty Images

    Actors, from left, Maria Pastor, Jose Maya, Jose Bustos, Raul Fernandez and Alicia Gonzalez play in 'Tres Anos', a show set in the 1930's between the two World Wars, at the Teatro Guindalera family theater on Nov. 3 in Madrid, Spain.

    Jasper Juinen / Getty Images

    The public watches as actress Maria Pastor, left, plays alongside Alicia Gonzalez in 'Tres Anos.'

    View more images from Spain on PhotoBlog.

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  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    3:30pm, EDT

    Lee Jin-man / AP

    South Korean performers dangle for Hi Seoul Festival

    South Korean performers suspend in midair during a performance, called "Aphrodite" by Spanish theater company La Fura Dels Baus, in Seoul, South Korea, Oct. 5, 2012. The performance is part of the Hi Seoul Festival running from Oct. 1 through Oct. 7.

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  • 3
    Oct
    2012
    8:02pm, EDT

    Ecuadoreans with disabilities take the stage

    Dolores Ochoa / AP

    Actresses wait for their turn to walk on stage during a performance of "Suenos," or "Dreams," at the Casa de la Cultura theater in Quito, Ecuador, Sept. 21, 2012.

    Dolores Ochoa / AP

    Actress Marisol Nunez, left, who is blind, is led to stage ahead of her performance.

    Associated Press reports — Not long ago, most of the 80 young cast members of one of Ecuador's most successful musicals were barely seen or heard.

    They are blind, autistic, have Down syndrome or other disabilities. But on stage, the actors, singers and dancers of "Suenos," or "Dreams," easily transcend their limitations.

    "What I like about this project is that it dignifies the disabled. Above all, the intellectually challenged, who have faced a lot of prejudice," said Marisol Nunez, a young blind woman whose acting and singing has captivated crowds.

    Nunez lost her eyesight as a child to a congenital disease and is among the most experienced actors and singers in the cast.

    The musical, which premiered three years ago, is based in part on the dreams of young people with disabilities and is presented by the nonprofit foundation El Triangulo.

    Those dreams have now been shared with thousands, and not just in Ecuador. Scenes from the musical have also been performed by cast members in the United States and Europe.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: These images were made available to NBC News on Oct. 3, 2012.

     

    Dolores Ochoa / AP

    Cast members mingle backstage at the Casa de la Cultura theater in Quito, Ecuador, Sept. 21.

    Dolores Ochoa / AP

    Singer Jennyfer Avila, experiencing a bout of stage fright, is comforted by her father prior to her performance in "Suenos," or "Dreams," at the Casa de la Cultura theater in Quito, Ecuador, Sept. 21.

    Dolores Ochoa / AP

    A cast member holds still as her make-up is applied and hair is brushed in preparation for her performance in "Suenos," or "Dreams," at the Casa de la Cultura theater in Quito, Ecuador, Sept. 21.

    Dolores Ochoa / AP

    Cast members wave goodbye to the audience as the curtain closes at the end of their performance of "Suenos," or "Dreams," one of Ecuador's most successful musicals, at the Casa de la Cultura Theater in Quito, Ecuador, Sept. 21.

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    1 comment

    This is terrible, but I am so glad I am not there. Bless their hearts though. I hope they have a good time.

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    6:08pm, EDT

    Nathan G / EPA

    Kathakali preparations in Chennai

    A Kathakali dancer adjusts his costume backstage prior to a performance in Chennai, India, Aug. 30 2012. Kathakali is a traditional dance-drama from the Indian state of Kerala, based on Hindu mythology. Depending on the character, nearly three to four hours are required to complete the Kathakali costume.

    See more photos on India

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  • 6
    Aug
    2012
    3:03pm, EDT

    Scenes from the Fringe: Edinburgh welcomes arts festival season

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    A girl with a papier-mache creature on her head is helped down a street during the Edinburgh Fringe on Aug. 6, in Edinburgh, Scotland. The Edinburgh Festival Fringe is the largest arts festivals in the world, it was established as an alternative to the International Festival also held in August, and celebrates it's 66th anniversary this year.

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    Street entertainers perform on the Royal Mile to promote their shows during in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival on Aug. 6, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

    Reuters -- The serious, anarchic and comedy-strewn Edinburgh Fringe has kicked into high gear this past weekend with a record number of shows and performers crowding the Scottish capital and giving a welcome boost to the economy as the city's population doubles over the month-long festival season.

    The official Fringe program lists a record 2,695 shows, plus more on the "Free Fringe", with an influx of nearly 23,000 performers this year. Festivals in Scotland are worth some 250 million pounds ($389.99 million) to the Scottish economy annually, with the Fringe itself bringing in 140 million pounds to Edinburgh alone.

    Read the full story.

    See more photos from Scotland on PhotoBlog.

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    Street entertainers perform on the Royal Mile to promote their shows during in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival on Aug. 6, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

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  • 13
    Jul
    2012
    9:34am, EDT

    Traditional Javanese theater struggles to survive

    Ulet Ifansasti / Getty Images

    A player of Ketoprak Tobong poses on the backstage.

    Ulet Ifansasti / Getty Images

    Sambudi, a player with the Ketoprak Tobong poses backstage.

    Ulet Ifansasti / Getty Images

    A view of Ketoprak Tobong stage in Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

    Ulet Ifansasti / Getty Images Contributor

    Indonesian women watch the Ketoprak Ketoprak Tobong Kelana Bhakti Budaya performance July 11, in Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

    Ulet Ifansasti / Getty Images

    Ketoprak Tobong players perform on the stage, July 11, in Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

     More photos and information about the Indonesia traditional theater from photographer Budi N.D. Dharmawan

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  • 12
    Jun
    2012
    4:33pm, EDT

    Javanese dance flourishes in Indonesian theater

    Wayang Orang dancers prepare for their show at the Bharata Theatre in Jakarta May 5, 2012.

    photos by Beawiharta / Reuters

    Wayang Orang, or Human Theater, is a type of traditional Javanese dance. A revival of immemorial culture allows the Bharata Theatre to show Jakarta an art once restricted to aristocrats. Wayang Orang is influenced by Hinduism and can involve more than 100 people as dancers and musicians.

    Wayang Orang dancers sit backstage and wait to perform

    A Wayang Orang dancer smokes before a show.

    Spectators watch a Wayang Orang performance at the Bharata Theatre.

    Wayang Orang dancers perform at the Bharata Theatre in Jakarta on May 5, 2012.

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  • 17
    May
    2012
    11:43am, EDT

    The smoky world of Kabul's movie theaters

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    A cinema goer uses his mobile phone to take a photograph of a film poster at Cinema Pamir in Kabul on May 4. Once a treasured luxury for the elite, Afghan cinemas are dilapidated and reflect an industry on the brink of collapse from conflict and financial neglect. Kabul's cinemas show Pakistani films in Pashto, American action films and Bollywood to rowdy, largely unemployed crowds in pursuit of any distraction from their drab surroundings.

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    Cinema goers watch a Pashto film at Pamir Cinema in Kabul on May 4.

    Danish Siddiqui, a Reuters photographer, looks to local movie theaters to learn more about a city's personality and culture. Last year, he documented a popular "travelling cinema" making a stop in Ond, India. On the Reuters Photographers Blog, he writes about his recent time inside Kabul's theaters:

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    A projectionist rewinds a roll of film inside the projection room at Cinema Pamir in Kabul on May 3.

    I believe that sometimes you learn about a city and its society from its local cinemas and the genre of films they choose to screen.

    There are only half a dozen cinemas in the whole of Kabul. Most of the theaters like Cinema Park and Ariana Cinema were destroyed during the civil war and were later shut down by the Taliban who had banned, among other things, going to the movies. Now every theater has three films shown every day with the first one starting at 10a.m.

    For me, it was a treat to be inside the cinemas and watch the inhabitants of the otherwise disturbed city sneak away a few moments of fun. At such times, they seem to forget the outside world and the tensions therein. For them, it’s a different Afghanistan inside the theater.

    Read Siddiqui's entire blog post.

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    Employees of Ariana Cinema stand on film cans as they work inside a storage room in Kabul on May 3.

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    The audience at a Bollywood film screening at Ariana Cinema in Kabul on May 3.

    Reuters reports -- Clouds of hashish and cigarette smoke float across a screen showing a dancing Pakistani woman, who evokes yowls of excitement from the hundreds of Afghan men passing their time in one of the capital's rundown cinemas.

    Once a treasured luxury for the elite, Afghan film connoisseurs are deeply distressed by the dilapidated state of their cinemas, which reflect an industry on the brink of collapse from conflict and financial neglect.

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    A cinema goer watches a Pashto film at Cinema Pamir in Kabul on May 3.

    "Before our audiences were educated. Now they are illiterates who understand nothing of cinema and come only to smoke (marijuana)," said Sayed Khalid Sadat, manager of Pameer cinema, which sits on a corner in the bustling centre of Kabul.

    Kabul's cinemas show Pakistani films in Pashto, American action films and Bollywood to rowdy, largely unemployed crowds in pursuit of any distraction from their drab surroundings.

    It's a far cry from the heyday of Afghan-produced film 40 years ago, when cinemagoers were required to wear suits or evening wear.

    Continue reading.

    See more photos of Afghanistan in our slideshow: A Nation at crossroads.

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    Ahmad Wali, a 15-year-old projectionist, works inside the projection room at Pamir Cinema in Kabul on May 2.

    Danish Siddiqui / Reuters

    Cinema goers rush into the theater before a show at Pamir Cinema in Kabul on May 4.

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  • 3
    Jan
    2011
    11:16pm, EST

    Claudio Reyes / EPA

    A member of French theater company 'Transe Express' performs during the opening of the 18th 'Santiago a Mil' theater festival outside La Moneda Palace in Santiago, Chile, Jan. 3. The event with participants from 22 countries will run until Jan. 30.

    Theater festival gets underway in Chile

    By Katie Cannon, Senior Multimedia Editor

    It looks like Barbie said, "Supersize me!". All kidding aside, this looks as though it couldn't help but be a fun performance to attend.

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